JOSM


JOSM is a free software desktop editing tool for OpenStreetMap geodata created in Java, originally developed by Immanuel Scholz and currently maintained by Dirk Stöcker. It has a lot of advanced features, but also more complicated user interface than default online editor iD.

Features

Some notable features of JOSM are importing GPX files, working with aerial imagery, support for multiple cartographic projections, layers, relations editing, data validation tools, data filtering, offline work, presets and rendering styles. JOSM provides more than 200 keyboard shortcuts for the core functions.
Many additional features are available through the plugins. There are more than 100 of them in the repository.

History

The first changeset was created on 27 September 2005. The first beta version was made available on 4 October 2005 and JOSM 1.0 was released on 22 January 2006. The current versioning scheme, using code changeset number, was introduced in 2008.
In 2014 the project logo was replaced with the current artwork, which won a design contest. From this year stable releases are identified with additional YY.MM internal version number, however they may not exactly reflect the release date.
Since revision 10786 released on 12 August 2016, support for Java versions earlier than 8 has been dropped.

Usage

The highest number of edits in OSM is done using JOSM. The software was used to perform several large scale OSM imports, including TIGER data in the United States.
JOSM can also be used for editing an OSM sister project OpenHistoricalMap. It's included as a package in many Linux distributions like Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora, Arch Linux and the OSGEO Live DVD
Various tutorials are available. The LearnOSM Tutorial, translated in 16 languages, has a section on JOSM. It covers the editing process, the tools, the plugins, the presets, the imagery functionalities, conflict resolution and other features.